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Old 01-06-2003, 04:29 PM   #11
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Unhappy

awwwwwwww..........
i was hoping for some psuedomathematical proof God exists, like in a post here i saw a while back. i feel cheated........

a terribly sad happyboy
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Old 01-07-2003, 04:47 PM   #12
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happy:

You'd feel a great deal happier if you had a dime for every time a theist told you they had 'proof' for 'God', and turned out to have nothing of the kind...

Keith.
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Old 01-08-2003, 10:32 PM   #13
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Ontological Argument
This argument basically says that since God is a perfect being, to implt that s/he does not to exist is to imply that to be perfect is to not exist. It also says that since beings that exist are more perfect than beings that do not exist, asserting that God does not exist would be saying that we are more perfect than the perfect being, a contradiction.

I may not have interpreted this exactly right, but that was my take on it. Do I even have to say anything? It tries to argue the existence of God by using that very existence as evidence.
An amusing argument invented by Anselm in the late 11th Century or so. Even within the Church this argument received a lot of criticism, being rejected immediately by Gaunilo and later by Aquinas although it was defended by Descartes. It was pretty much destroyed by Kant, yet variant versions (which I believe fallacious) have since been defended by Hegel, Hartsorne and Plantinga (the last two in the 20th century).
I think it can effectively be boiled down to:
Definition: "God" - a being that nothing is greater than.
Assumption: God does not exist
Premise: An existent being is greater than a non-existent being
Conclusion 1: Something is greater than God. (from Assumption & Premise)
Conclusion 2: Conclusion 1 and Definition contradict, therefore the Assumption is false, therefore God exists.

It effectively relies on clever wording to try to sneak God's existence into the definition.

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The Cosmological Argument
The Cosmological Argument is based on the belief (fact?) that everything is caused by something else. For every moving thing, there was something to set it in motion, etc. It says that this implies the existence of a self-sufficient, "necessary" being to begin the chain reaction.

IMO, this was the most valid of the three arguments. It's not going to make me change my mind, but it did make me think.
Originally (as far as we know anyway) proposed by Plato in the 4th century BC, this argument has had many formulations and defenders, -most notably Aristotle, Aquinas and Leibniz- and has had probably by far the single most brainpower put into its defence of all arguments for the existence of God. The wide number of variants make it impossible to call anything "the Cosmological Argument" and given a particular objection to one formulation of the argument, there are certainly other formulations in circulation to which the objection does not apply. For example, the version William Lane Craig currently promotes is of Muslim origin and utterly different to anything suggested in the West from Plato to Leibniz, and IMO it probably should not have the same name.

I'm inclined to grant that there most probably exists a valid Cosmological argument. However, it seems to me that the single and rather glaring fault of the traditional Cosmological argument is that it doesn't actually prove God. All it would seem to show is the definite existence of a first cause - hardly a stunning declaration, naturalists aplenty are happy with a first cause, be it natural law, the universe or something else. To prove God the Cosmological argument needs to show that the first cause is an personal or aware being - something traditional versions of the argument take no thought for. (Indeed the first causes of Plato and Aristotle seem to have been far more naturalistic than theistic) IMO time would be much better spent on speculating why the first thing should be considered aware and not natural.
More modern versions of the argument generally attempt to incorporate some sort of reason why the first cause should have a "will" or similar into the argument.

BTW eh, why do you use the 1st law of Thermodynamics (Conservation of Energy) and ignore the 2nd (Increase of Entropy) which strongly implies a finite time period of activity?

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The Teleological Argument
The third argument is based on the complexity of life. The example the book gave was the fact that the ears of rabbits are formed to focus sounds behind it- the area of greatest danger. It argues that there must have been something behind the scenes, consciously arranging these things.

This argument was started well before people knew about evolution. We now have a scientific answer for it.
Agreed. However, the Teleological argument comes in an even wider variety of formulations than the Cosmological argument to the point that it might as well be called "miscellaneous" argument. In general what an argument must do to properly be classed as Teleological is to conclude a non-materialistic explanation from some observation or experience. Eg, your version argued that materialistic processes were insufficient to account for the observed existence of life. A more modern version -often called the Fine-Tuning argument- argues (usually based on probabilities) that the basic physical principles that determine the behaviour of the universe suggest intelligent design. Alternatively, arguments which attempt to prove the existence of non-material entities in a Platonic sense -such as numbers, ideas, concepts, sets, meanings or the like- are also often classed as Teleological.

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Well, what do you think?
Well personally after considering the nature of conscious awareness and teleological considerations regarding concepts, I have come to firmly believe that a material explanation of such things is always going to be fundamentally insufficient and will necessarily involve handwaving and ignorance. -For the reason that no natural materialistic cause effect system can ever generate the living awareness I observe in my own consciousness nor can such unified ideas as simple concepts be explained fully in terms of a miscellany of naturalistic atoms, particles, and laws because these things are of a fundamentally different nature and when you put matter and motion together you might get pretty patterns, you might get complex structures forming - but only by handwaving do you ever get such functionally different things as awareness, senses, will, concepts etc. Hence I am what's called a Dualist. This position, once adopted, tends to have a snowball effect when applied to other arguments and pretty quickly implies the existence of God.

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Personally, I think that any time you try to logically argue the existence of a higher power, it goes horribly wrong. Religion is based on faith, not reason.
Do you mean that in the majority of cases people believe because they want to as opposed to for well thought out and rationally evidenced reasons? -In which case I'd agree. Or that religion cannot (or perhaps should not?) be based on reason? -In which case I'd disagree.
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Old 01-09-2003, 06:18 PM   #14
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At best, you could say 'everything but 'God'' needs a cause, and you'd have to explain why 'God' is exempt from the rule.
The book appears to be dealing only with Aquanian conception of the cosmological argument, and Aquinas assumed that the universe was infinite and eternal. The kalaam cosmological argument is a lot better, but a lot of medeivals rejected it since it implied a begining to the universe.

In the kalaam cosmolgical argument, we say that "everything which begins to exist has a cause". God is exempt because He did not begin to exist.

I think the ontological argument is absurd, but the cosmological argument is pretty convincing. Even if you deny that God is the entity that exists necessarily, you have to admit that SOMETHING does, and this "something" is as inexplicable in it's "uncaused-ness" as is God.

Am I to understand that you folks actually consider an infinite regress a possibility?
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Old 01-09-2003, 07:07 PM   #15
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Isn't an "uncaused" god an infinite regress? "He always was and He always will be," as the old saw goes. "Always was," is about as infinite a regress as you can get.
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Old 01-09-2003, 07:22 PM   #16
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Originally posted by Tercel
BTW eh, why do you use the 1st law of Thermodynamics (Conservation of Energy) and ignore the 2nd (Increase of Entropy) which strongly implies a finite time period of activity?
I don't think I ever argued that time must be infinite, so the 2nd does not hurt the argument.

However, there is nothing that prevents the universe from existing forever. Modern cosmology allows for the universe to be without beginning or end, and producing stars and galaxies forever. The 2nd law is then only a statistical law, that does not take the long term effects of gravity into account.
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Old 01-09-2003, 07:26 PM   #17
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Originally posted by luvluv
....Even if you deny that God is the entity that exists necessarily, you have to admit that SOMETHING does, and this "something" is as inexplicable in it's "uncaused-ness" as is God.
Yeah, and we call this SOMETHING the universe.
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Old 01-09-2003, 07:26 PM   #18
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Originally posted by Biff the unclean
Isn't an "uncaused" god an infinite regress? "He always was and He always will be," as the old saw goes. "Always was," is about as infinite a regress as you can get.
Actually, it's an arbitrary way to avoid infinite regress. It seems more than a little silly to proclaim that something we can observe is caused, whereas something we can't observe is not.
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Old 01-10-2003, 07:25 PM   #19
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However, there is nothing that prevents the universe from existing forever. Modern cosmology allows for the universe to be without beginning or end, and producing stars and galaxies forever.
What you talking 'bout, Willis?

Are you referring to the Hawking-Hortle model with the without begining stuff? And the notion that the universe can go on producing stars forever is news to this little black duck.
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Old 01-11-2003, 03:00 PM   #20
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It's all speculation as with a lot of cosmology, but there is nothing preventing stars from emerging from the vacuum of space. Inflation is the most popular of such theories that would allow for eternal star production, but there are other models. A variation of brane cosmology allows for the universe to be cyclic, and thus stars would continually be created.

It's hard to test a lot of these ideas, but the point is that there is nothing fundemental we know of that disallows an eternal universe from existing.
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